The city is preparing for hundreds of thousands of people to flock to downtown Pittsburgh to celebrate the Penguins’ Stanley Cup win.
Road closures will begin at 9 a.m. Wednesday, with the parade starting at 11 a.m. It'll kick off on Grant Street and continue down the Boulevard of the Allies, ending with a rally at Point State Park.
Pittsburgh communications director Tim McNulty said the city is mainly concerned with keeping spectators safe.
“The main public safety concern at this point is the high temperatures and the humidity,” McNulty said. “We want to make sure people remain safe, wear the right kind of clothing to be outdoors tomorrow and keep hydrated.”
More than 400,000 Pens fans attended last year’s parade and the city expects this year’s celebration to meet or exceed that attendance.
McNulty said the city has been lucky in getting to celebrate back-to-back Stanley Cup titles. Using last year’s plans as a guide, the city decided to change the rally point to the city side of Point State Park.
“The old staging area at Stanwix Street and Boulevard of the Allies would often get a little bit too crowded, so we’re hoping this will open up to give people a little bit more freedom,” McNulty said.
McNulty said plenty of emergency responders will be on hand -- especially with more extreme weather expected this year.
“It’s going to be about 10 degrees warmer than last year and even last year we had a great number of medical emergencies,” McNulty said.
In a tweet, Pittsburgh mayor Bill Peduto said that having the parade Wednesday was based on players’ availability.
People. People. People. C'mon. Scheduling is based on TEAMs availability. Players leaving Thursday. Public Safety top concern. Bring poncho.
— bill peduto (@billpeduto) June 12, 2017
The mayor later said he will not be able to make it in time for the parade:
Not able to attend the victory parade for Stanley Cup Champions @penguins but sending pride from D.C. pic.twitter.com/QbtG4DpiK7
— bill peduto (@billpeduto) June 14, 2017
The city expects to have roads reopened to traffic by mid-afternoon Wednesday.